1st Edition
Naming a Transnational Black Feminist Framework Writing in Darkness
Prologue
Acknowledgments
1 Naming a Transnational Black Feminist Framework: Calling for an International Relations Intervention
2 Honduras’ Ereba Makers: Garifuna Foodways as Grassroots Alternatives to Development
3 Understanding Black Women’s Families: The Value of Centering Family in IR Studies
4 Honduran Garifuna Nation: A Black Matrifocal Society in a Mestizo Patriarchal State
5 Beyond States: Understanding Transnational Indigeneity in Latin America
6 Conclusion: Opportunities for Transnational Solidarity
Epilogue
Index
Biography
K. Melchor Quick Hall is a faculty member in Fielding Graduate University’s School of Leadership Studies, US. Interested in transnational feminist and grassroots work that advances liberation struggles, she is working to strengthen relationships between grassroots organizations in the US and other countries.






